Canadian new home prices have largely resisted a correction, but they may be ready to give in. Statistics Canada’s (StatCan) New Housing Price Index (NHPI) shows an unusually sharp drop in October—the largest since 2009. But the bigger story is buried in the data: a rare shift in the relationship between land and house prices that’s only happened once in the past 50 years. Spoiler: It wasn’t bullish the last time it happened.
Canadian New Home Prices See Biggest Drop Since 2009
Canadian New Housing Price Index.
Source: StatCan; Better Dwelling.
Canada’s NHPI marked its seventh straight monthly decline last month. Prices fell 0.41% in October—the largest single-month decline since 2009. Prices are down 1.85% since last year, also printing the largest year-over-year drop since 2009. Prices are back to early 2022 levels, a level that hardly signals strong demand.
How far prices have fallen isn’t nearly as important as how fast they’re suddenly falling. Since peaking in 2022, prices have slipped just 3.1%, but more than one-eighth of that drop occurred last month alone. In other words, it’s been 38 months since the peak, and the most recent month—3% of the period—represented more than 12% of the total correction. That kind of acceleration may be good news for future buyers—but it’s a warning sign for valuations ahead.
New Home Prices Are Usually Driven By Rising Land Costs
New home prices are made up of two components: the house and the land. Traditionally, the land portion carries more weight than the house. That makes sense—land is scarce, tied to infrastructure, and doesn’t depreciate with use (industrial sites aside). It also tends to inflate faster during credit booms, as it facilitates greater leverage for land speculation.
This has been the case in Canada for roughly 50 years—except for one rare period that probably stands out to Canadian real estate experts.
Canadian New Home Prices Have Only Seen Home Costs Surpass Land Once Before—Until Now
Canadian New Home Price Index: Broken Down By House and Land Price Growth.
Source: StatCan; Better Dwelling.
In Canada, there have been only two periods on record where the house portion of new home prices outpaced land. The first was a brief period in the 1980s, right before the 1990s bubble popped and triggered a long downturn in urban real estate. The second is now, which started in 2021.
Another point that stands out: land prices, which inflate with excessive cheap credit, haven’t corrected at all. Since the NHPI peaked in 2022, the house portion dropped 4.55%, while land prices are virtually unchanged (+0.09%). That leaves us with two takeaways: one on scarcity, and another about price.
The narrative that rising home prices are driven by land scarcity doesn’t hold up in this data. In fact, the scarcity premium is largely in the house portion—not land. Bluntly put: demand to build quickly has driven the price of building a home much faster than the narrative of a land shortage. It’s a known phenomenon that’s often ignored in favor of the narrative calling for more incentives. But more importantly, this suggests that the state-sponsored building boom is more about preserving prices than affordability.
Then there’s the recent price signal itself. The house portion has only ever exceeded land during speculative booms—and the last time, a sharp correction followed. Maybe this time is different, and home prices will be expensive forever—everywhere. People have said that for as long as land speculation has existed, and this may be the time it does—but that narrative is fighting history, human nature, and basic math.
